Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor: Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History
Gespeichert in:
1. Verfasser: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | English |
Veröffentlicht: |
New York
Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers
2016
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Ausgabe: | 1st, New ed |
Schlagworte: | |
Online-Zugang: | UER01 BSB01 URL des Erstveröffentlichers |
Beschreibung: | Online resource; title from title screen (viewed June 27, 2019) |
Beschreibung: | 1 Online-Ressource (181 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781453917329 |
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contents | This book by David K. O'Rourke presents a study of language and linguistic forms and the roles they played in the initial imagining, developing, and maintaining of a society based on coerced labor. It focuses especially on the contexts of coercion and on the differences in the roles of masters and servants from society to society. In the interaction between colonial powers and conquered peoples, O'Rourke also describes how the European colonial nations imposed their own languages, social metaphors, and utopian views as a way to disconnect those they conquered from their historic roots and re-imagine, redefine, rename, and map them into new lands and places inhabited by inferior peoples needing control by masters who understand how they should now live. O'Rourke begins by describing how this rewriting of history is not new. He calls on well-established classical and biblical language studies to describe how older and historic oral histories and texts were rewritten to reshape the past to fit new and more useful views. He explains how rhetoric, metaphor, and pseudo-sciences were used to change Europe's earlier contracted and coerced labor in colonial America into the chattel slavery that became the hallmark of the new and growing United States. O'Rourke also describes how the dominant culture's current values, foundational metaphors, and sacred notions were woven together into linguistic shelters that served to enshrine the repressive process from questioning and dissent. These same linguistic elements were then used after emancipation to maintain and sanitize the remains of the slave system by presenting it as a benign institution |
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edition | 1st, New ed |
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spelling | O'Rourke, David K. Verfasser aut Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History David K. O'Rourke 1st, New ed New York Peter Lang Inc., International Academic Publishers 2016 1 Online-Ressource (181 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Online resource; title from title screen (viewed June 27, 2019) This book by David K. O'Rourke presents a study of language and linguistic forms and the roles they played in the initial imagining, developing, and maintaining of a society based on coerced labor. It focuses especially on the contexts of coercion and on the differences in the roles of masters and servants from society to society. In the interaction between colonial powers and conquered peoples, O'Rourke also describes how the European colonial nations imposed their own languages, social metaphors, and utopian views as a way to disconnect those they conquered from their historic roots and re-imagine, redefine, rename, and map them into new lands and places inhabited by inferior peoples needing control by masters who understand how they should now live. O'Rourke begins by describing how this rewriting of history is not new. He calls on well-established classical and biblical language studies to describe how older and historic oral histories and texts were rewritten to reshape the past to fit new and more useful views. He explains how rhetoric, metaphor, and pseudo-sciences were used to change Europe's earlier contracted and coerced labor in colonial America into the chattel slavery that became the hallmark of the new and growing United States. O'Rourke also describes how the dominant culture's current values, foundational metaphors, and sacred notions were woven together into linguistic shelters that served to enshrine the repressive process from questioning and dissent. These same linguistic elements were then used after emancipation to maintain and sanitize the remains of the slave system by presenting it as a benign institution Geschichte 1776-1850 gnd rswk-swf Sklaverei (DE-588)4055260-3 gnd rswk-swf Herr (DE-588)4159632-8 gnd rswk-swf Etymologie (DE-588)4015640-0 gnd rswk-swf Diener (DE-588)4149729-6 gnd rswk-swf Rhetorik (DE-588)4076704-8 gnd rswk-swf Legitimation (DE-588)4114382-6 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 gnd rswk-swf USA (DE-588)4078704-7 g Sklaverei (DE-588)4055260-3 s Herr (DE-588)4159632-8 s Diener (DE-588)4149729-6 s Etymologie (DE-588)4015640-0 s Rhetorik (DE-588)4076704-8 s Legitimation (DE-588)4114382-6 s Geschichte 1776-1850 z DE-604 Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe 9781433125171 Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe 9781454196693 Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe 9781454196709 https://www.peterlang.com/view/product/30718?format=EPDF Verlag URL des Erstveröffentlichers Volltext |
spellingShingle | O'Rourke, David K. Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History This book by David K. O'Rourke presents a study of language and linguistic forms and the roles they played in the initial imagining, developing, and maintaining of a society based on coerced labor. It focuses especially on the contexts of coercion and on the differences in the roles of masters and servants from society to society. In the interaction between colonial powers and conquered peoples, O'Rourke also describes how the European colonial nations imposed their own languages, social metaphors, and utopian views as a way to disconnect those they conquered from their historic roots and re-imagine, redefine, rename, and map them into new lands and places inhabited by inferior peoples needing control by masters who understand how they should now live. O'Rourke begins by describing how this rewriting of history is not new. He calls on well-established classical and biblical language studies to describe how older and historic oral histories and texts were rewritten to reshape the past to fit new and more useful views. He explains how rhetoric, metaphor, and pseudo-sciences were used to change Europe's earlier contracted and coerced labor in colonial America into the chattel slavery that became the hallmark of the new and growing United States. O'Rourke also describes how the dominant culture's current values, foundational metaphors, and sacred notions were woven together into linguistic shelters that served to enshrine the repressive process from questioning and dissent. These same linguistic elements were then used after emancipation to maintain and sanitize the remains of the slave system by presenting it as a benign institution Sklaverei (DE-588)4055260-3 gnd Herr (DE-588)4159632-8 gnd Etymologie (DE-588)4015640-0 gnd Diener (DE-588)4149729-6 gnd Rhetorik (DE-588)4076704-8 gnd Legitimation (DE-588)4114382-6 gnd |
subject_GND | (DE-588)4055260-3 (DE-588)4159632-8 (DE-588)4015640-0 (DE-588)4149729-6 (DE-588)4076704-8 (DE-588)4114382-6 (DE-588)4078704-7 |
title | Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History |
title_auth | Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History |
title_exact_search | Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History |
title_exact_search_txtP | Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History |
title_full | Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History David K. O'Rourke |
title_fullStr | Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History David K. O'Rourke |
title_full_unstemmed | Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History David K. O'Rourke |
title_short | Servants, Masters, and the Coercion of Labor |
title_sort | servants masters and the coercion of labor inventing the rhetoric of slavery the verbal sanctuaries which sustain it and how it was used to sanitize american slavery s history |
title_sub | Inventing the Rhetoric of Slavery, the Verbal Sanctuaries Which Sustain It, and How It Was Used to Sanitize American Slavery's History |
topic | Sklaverei (DE-588)4055260-3 gnd Herr (DE-588)4159632-8 gnd Etymologie (DE-588)4015640-0 gnd Diener (DE-588)4149729-6 gnd Rhetorik (DE-588)4076704-8 gnd Legitimation (DE-588)4114382-6 gnd |
topic_facet | Sklaverei Herr Etymologie Diener Rhetorik Legitimation USA |
url | https://www.peterlang.com/view/product/30718?format=EPDF |
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